Ethics, Economics and Freedom
The Failure of Consequentialist Social Welfare Theory
Timothy P. Roth(Author)
Ashgate Publishing Limited
Published on 28. December 1999
Book
Hardback
120 pages
978-0-7546-1009-0 (ISBN)
Description
Nobel laureate James Buchanan once asked, 'What should economists do?' The author answers by examining the theoretical, empirical and ethical problems which inhere in consequence-based, procedurally-detached social welfare theory (SWT). The fundamental constructs of SWT are found to be indeterminate. Moreover, SWT is irreconcilable with the moral force of rights and non-accommodative of alternative understandings of justice. Finally, the unintended consequences of application of the efficiency standard include the growth of government, the rationalization of 'efficiency-enhancing corruption' and a truncated view of 'transition' and other socio-economic-legal-political-cultural problems. The author argues, therefore, for a contractarian alternative which emphasizes the importance of endogenously generated ethical constraints, assigns lexical priority to rights and forces attention upon constitutional questions. While SWT focuses on outcomes and seeks to 'get the prices right' the alternative seeks to 'get the institutions right.' Given ethical constraints, rights protection and just 'rules of the game', individuals are free to pursue their ends, whatever those ends may be.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Weight
272 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7546-1009-0 (9780754610090)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Timothy P. Roth Ph.D, The University of Texas at El Paso, USA
Content
Contents: The theoretical foundations of the new social welfare theory; The neoclassical behavioural postulates: a critical appraisal; The neoclassical approach to technology: a critical appraisal; The implications for the efficiency frontier; Efficiency and rights; The implications for the social welfare function; Alternatives to consequentialist social welfare theory; Contractarian analysis and political institutions; Bibliography; Index.